
It could be argued that the first in any
category is usually the most significant -
somebody had to break the ground that is
often taken for granted by later generations.
Often this person becomes a role model for those
who follow, for better or for worse. Harriet
Tenney, when she accepted an appointment as
Michigan's state librarian in 1869, became the first
woman to hold this position and started a tradition
of female leadership of the State Library that
went on for 100 consecutive years and continues
to this day.
From 1859 to 1869, Harriet Tenney's husband
Eugene served as state librarian. Harriet
took advantage of the many opportunities to aid
her husband in administering the State Library.
When Eugene resigned to pursue other interests
and recommended his wife for the position,
Governor H.P. Baldwin and the Legislature
appointed Harriet Tenney as state librarian.
Combining the knowledge she gained from
her husband's decade as state librarian with her
own vision, Harriet Tenney had an immediate
effect on the State Library. During her first twoyear
term, the collection grew by 5,000 volumes
to 30,097, and popular authors such as Mark
Twain and Harriet Beecher Stowe were added to
the collection.
That Tenney realized the significance of her
position is reflected in use of italics and capital letters
in the opening paragraph of her first annual
report: "By the advice of the Chief Executive of
the State and with the unanimous consent and
approbation of the Senate, on the 31st day of
March 1869, this Library was placed in charge of
a WOMAN."
Harriet Tenney's first major tests involved
moving the State Library and its collection to two
new locations within the first nine years of her
tenure. In 1871 the library was moved from the
old State Capitol to the new State Office
Building. During this time, Harriet worked tirelessly,
even denying herself any vacation during
the year of the move.
In 1874, Harriet Tenney went before the
Legislature with a comparison of states' library
budgets as a way of showing that other states
spent far more than Michigan
on their libraries. The governor
recommended and the
Legislature approved a $5,000
appropriation bill. To keep
up with the times, gas lights
were even ordered for the
State Library.
In 1875 appropriations
for the library dipped down to
$500 as all budget and legislative
focus was on the construction
of the new State
Capitol. Although appropriations
were reduced, the
Legislature's high esteem for
Harriet Tenney was apparent,
as her salary was increased to
$1,000, making her pay equal
to the governors'!
During her tenure, Tenney worked to extend
the state librarian's role beyond a mere keeper of
books. The first state librarian to be a member of
the American Library Association, she attended the
ALA annual conference in Philadelphia, coming
back to Michigan with many new concepts. As
library visitation increased, she formulated plans to
accommodate patrons' needs, increased correspondence
and began cataloging books with cards,
which necessitated major clerical help. Again,
Tenney was able to win over the Legislature - an
assistant State Librarian was appointed and plans
for a card catalog system implemented.
In 1878 Harriet Tenney supervised the move to
the present State Capitol. A year later, appropriations
jumped back to $3,000, and State Library
hours were increased. As the library grew with the
new Capitol, Harriet Tenney was able to convince
the Legislature to increase the staff and the budget.
Mrs. Tenney was appointed state librarian for
11 consecutive terms by seven governors, serving 22
years before leaving the position in 1891. Her last
report lists a collection of over 56,000 books.
Assistant State Librarian Mary Spencer wrote of her
role model Mrs. Tenney that "the library was her
life and her joy; she loved the books as the mother
does her child, and watched them closely."
Margaret Custer Calhoun, widow of Lieutenant
Calhoun and sister of the late General Custer, succeeded
Harriet Tenney as state librarian, serving in
the position for only two years. Although Calhoun
never had the influence of a Harriet Tenney, she
actually had several significant accomplishments.
She persuaded the Legislature to increase the
appropriation Harriet Tenney had recommended
by $1,000 and to remove all restrictions on
employing clerical help, as she maintained that
the State Library's patrons deserved skilled labor.
Calhoun also had the good judgment to
retain Mary Spencer as assistant state librarian.
Spencer, who administered the cataloging during
Calhoun's term and was appointed state
librarian when Calhoun stepped down, went on
to become one of the most influential state
librarians in Michigan history.
Both Harriet Tenney and Margaret Calhoun
earned the respect of the male governors and
legislators with whom they worked, laying the
groundwork for an unbroken succession of
female state librarians from 1869 to 1968.
by Jim Schultz, Department of History, Arts
and Libraries
Updated 04/01/2003